It also uses dimming technology to minimize flicker and help prevent eye fatigue for a more comfortable working environment. Light-Shielding Hood An optional shading hood is available that effectively prevents glare on the monitor's screen caused by ambient lighting.

The shading hood is newly designed and attaches to the monitor magnetically. At 60, there are no problems with shadow detail, banding etc.

In order to run the display at brightness levels outside of this range, you need to click a warning checkbox to extend the range - and then the range can go from 30 to or more. You can even set it to minimum and maximum - and I was Eizo ColorEdge CG245W Monitor to get it to bottom out at There is no problem viewing image uniformly from one side of the display to the other.

If viewing extremely off-axis, we will see changes in color and brightness as is expected. Up-and-down variation is a bit more pronounced than the side-by-side variation. Internal Processing bit Internal processing.

Calibration software - Eizo ColorNavigator ColorNavigator software is required for properly calibrating this display using the internal swing sensor. This works on any recent ColorNavigator version going back to version 5. ColorNavigator is available from the Eizo website and is free to download Eizo ColorEdge CG245W Monitor use.

Rotation and monitor stand Rotates between vertical and horizontal. There is no "automatic" image rotation though. This display has a Eizo ColorEdge CG245W Monitor designed stand which enables the display to be lowered right onto the tabletop or as high as 8 inches off the table.

It can swivel left Eizo ColorEdge CG245W Monitor right degrees on a platform that moves with the display and at the same time contains a stationary base under the stand which remains in constant contact with the table top. It can be positioned from a bit more than fully upright, to laid back about 33 degrees.

Eizo ColorEdge CGW " Widescreen LCD Display

Black level Much importance is place on an LCD monitor's ability to reproduce blacks and near-blacks well. Expensive for non-critical work Eizo trumpeted the CGW's arrival as the first professional colour-critical monitor capable of self-calibration.

On first look, it differs little from its ColorEdge stable mates. Where it does differ to the ColorEdge series, however, is in its build. At the top of the monitor's inner edge rests a recessed 'wiper-style' calibration device.